Updated
Updated · Livescience.com · Jun 12
Small Magellanic Cloud Expands at 38,000 mph as Large Magellanic Cloud Tears It Apart
Updated
Updated · Livescience.com · Jun 12

Small Magellanic Cloud Expands at 38,000 mph as Large Magellanic Cloud Tears It Apart

3 articles · Updated · Livescience.com · Jun 12

Summary

  • More than a decade of VISTA observations shows nearly all stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud moving outward at about 38,000 mph, revealing a galaxy-wide tidal disruption rather than localized disturbance.
  • Their southeast-northwest motion points to the Large Magellanic Cloud as the driver, overturning the long-held view that the smaller galaxy behaves like a rotating disk.
  • At that pace, stars could shift several thousand light-years within a few hundred million years, enough to significantly distort the Small Magellanic Cloud and possibly split it in two.
  • The finding strengthens earlier hints of opposing stellar motions and suggests repeated encounters between the two dwarf galaxies have shaped the Magellanic system over billions of years.
  • Researchers said the result could reshape understanding of the Milky Way's 60-plus dwarf satellites, with a new VISTA-based survey due later this year to map motions toward and away from Earth.

Insights

Astronomers were wrong about a nearby galaxy's spin. How many other galaxies are we fundamentally misunderstanding?
A galactic collision is revealing primordial secrets. What else will this cosmic brawl uncover before its final act?
A neighboring galaxy is being devoured. Is this cosmic cannibalism the ultimate fate of all smaller galaxies?

The Small Magellanic Cloud’s Demise: Real-Time Evidence of a Galaxy Torn Apart by Tidal Forces from the Large Magellanic Cloud

Overview

The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), a close neighbor of the Milky Way, is being dramatically torn apart by the powerful gravitational pull of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). Instead of rotating like a typical galaxy, the SMC’s stars are moving outward in a large-scale expansion, especially along a southeast–northwest axis. This outward motion is a clear sign of tidal stretching caused by repeated encounters with the LMC over billions of years. As a result, the SMC is now in a highly disturbed state, with chaotic and radial stellar motions, showing that it is slowly coming apart.

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